Germantown, Louisville
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Germantown is a neighborhood three miles southeast of downtown Louisville, Kentucky, USA. Germantown is also a general term for an area of Louisville from the Original Highlands to St Joseph and Bradley neighborhoods that were predominenly settled by Germans. The actual neighborhood is bounded by Barrett Ave, Eastern Parkway, and the South Fork of Beargrass Creek.
The area was settled as small farms and butcher shops by German immigrants in the 1870s. At this time area was nicknamed 'Frogtown' because the adjacent Beargrass Creek frequently flooded the area, causing numerous epidemics of malaria. The flooding problem was solved when Beargrass Creek was routed into a much deeper concrete canal. The area was subdived and developed heavily during the 1890s, when the largest collection of shotgun houses in the city of Louisville was built.
In 1907, a bridge was built across the South Fork of Beargrass Creek. which allowed French Huguenots north of the creek, in an area called Paristown, to attend the one Catholic church in the area.
[edit] Demographics
As of 2000, the population of Germantown was 3,867
, of which 93.9% are white, 4.2% are black, 1.6% are listed as other, and 0.7% are hispanic. College graduates are of the 17.9% population, people without a high school degree are 29.3%. Females outnumber males 52.9% to 47.1%.[edit] References
- ^ Community Resource Network. Retrieved on November 18, 2005.